wun866 Wrote:why cannot who modifier modify policy makers...?
it can.
that isn't the problem.
wun866 Wrote:why cannot who modifier modify policy makers...?
tim Wrote:i think you could safely conclude that "they" refers to the financial experts, because the sentence is indicating that they hold two different perspectives..
"now viewing" looks like a noun modifier. remember, whether something is a noun modifier or a verb modifier depends on what it's modifying, not the nature of the words in the modifier. but although "view" is a verb, that does not mean that "viewing" is.
also remember that if you have a noun modifier, it touches the noun it is modifying, so it is certainly not modifying "financial experts". i am still skeptical of this example in general though; can you provide a source for the problem?
In D -- is there another way to eliminate this option, other than the idiom at play ?
Given there will be a decision about interest rates to be made in the future --- why is the present tense (option A) prefered over future tense (in option D)
It was my understanding that comma + verb'ing's or comma + gerunds are ALWAYS adverbial modifiers ...now seems like per the Red -- it is not ?
Sage Pearce-Higgins Wrote: The only error I can find in D is that the preposition 'that' has nothing to refer to.